Abstract

The conformationally restricted tertiary amides N-methyl-2-pyrrolidone 6, N-methyl-2-piperidone 7 and N-methyl-ε-caprolactam 8 were oxidised by 5,10,15,20-tetraphenylporphyrinatoiron() chloride/tert-butyl
hydroperoxide (TPPFe/ButOOH) and by phenobarbital-induced rat liver microsomes. The products were the N-demethylated lactams together with the analogous N-methylimides and norimides. For the TPPFe/ButOOH reaction ring oxidation is preferred to N-demethylation, paralleling the relative stabilities of the corresponding intermediate carbon-centred radicals as calculated by the AM1 semi-empirical method. In contrast, the microsomal reaction of the N-methyllactams strongly favours N-demethylation, demonstrating that hydrogen atom abstraction from the alkyl group Z to the amide carbonyl oxygen atom is preferred. The chiral tertiary amides N-methyl-N-
(1-phenylethyl)benzamide 9 and N-methyl-5-phenyl-2-pyrrolidone 10 were also oxidised by TPPFe/ButOOH and by phenobarbital-induced rat liver microsomes. Using TPPFe/ButOOH, loss of the secondary alkyl group of 9 is
preferred by a factor of ca. 6. Similarly, ring oxidation of 10 is favoured over demethylation by a factor of 9. For
the microsomal reaction of (R)-9 dealkylation is preferred over demethylation by a factor of 1.7, whereas for (S)-9
demethylation is favoured by a factor of 1.25. For the microsomal reaction of (R)-10 and (S)-10 ring oxidation at
the 5-position of the pyrrolidone ring is preferred over demethylation by factors of ca. 4 and 9 for the two isomers, respectively, and the (S)-enantiomer undergoes ring oxidation 2–3 times more readily than the (R)-enantiomer. For both 9 and 10 there is negligible stereochemical influence of the chiral centre upon the N-demethylation reaction. The results show that the stereochemical preference of the microsomal N-dealkylation reaction is modest.

Item Type:

Journal Article

ISSN:

0300-9580

Extra Information:

Please note that some of the chemical symbols have not carried over correctly into the bibliographcal record.